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Dateline: June 21, 2001
Officers
recover stolen truck before it's missed
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Clarendon’s
Mac Stavenhagen hasn’t had very good luck with pickup trucks lately.
Stavenhagen’s
old pickup was wrecked on March 29 when the partially loaded fertilizer
spreader he was pulling started fishtailing, spun the lightweight Dodge
truck 180 degrees, and flipped it over on its top.
Stavenhagen
replaced that truck with a ’94 Chevrolet only to have it stolen from his
home last week.
Donley
County Deputy Bruce Burrell was on patrol about midnight last Thursday
when he saw a suspicious subject near Duckwall’s variety store,
according to Sheriff Butch Blackburn. The deputy circled around behind the
store with his lights off and discovered ’94 Chevrolet pickup parked
there.
Burrell
called for assistance, and Chief Deputy Randy Bond picked up 17-year-old
Daniel Curry and took him in for questioning. Curry confessed to stealing
Stavenhagen’s pickup and was planning to go to Pampa in it, the sheriff
said.
Curry
remained in the Donley County Jail at press time on a charge of
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, and Blackburn said he will face a
June 21 grand jury.
Curry
is already under indictment for breaking into the vocational agriculture
building at Clarendon ISD on April 8, a crime to which he also confessed.
He was out on bond when he stole Stavenhagen’s pickup, Blackburn
said.
“I
was very fortunate to have recovered [the truck] so quickly,”
Stavenhagen said. “I went to bed about 11 p.m. and had gone outside just
before that. I didn’t notice if it was gone then.”
The
sheriff’s department called Stavenhagen about 12:30 a.m. to say they had
found his pickup, he said.
“I’d
like to thank the sheriff’s department for being on the ball. They
prevented me from losing the truck.”
Sheriff
Blackburn commended Deputies Burrell and Bond for their quick action on
this case.
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